AMY GOODMAN: Civil liberties advocates are
raising alarm over news that the FBI is giving agents more leeway to
conduct domestic surveillance. According to the New York Times,
new guidelines will allow FBI agents to investigate people and
organizations "proactively" without firm evidence for suspecting
criminal activity. The new rules will free up agents to infiltrate
organizations, search household trash, use surveillance teams, search
databases, conduct lie detector tests, even without suspicion of any
wrongdoing.
The revised guidelines come as the FBI’s existing practices have already come under wide scrutiny. Last month, the New York Times
revealed a number of new revelations against activists targeted by
domestic spying. One of those activists is 44-year-old Scott Crow, an
Austin, Texas resident, self-proclaimed anarchist. He has just learned
he was targeted by the FBI from 2001 until at least 2008. Using the
Freedom of Information Act, Scott received 440 pages of heavily redacted
documents revealing the FBI had traced the license plates of cars
parked in front of his home, recorded the arrival and departure of his
guests, observed gatherings that he attended at bookstores and cafes.
The agency also tracked his emails and phone conversations, picked
through his trash to identify his bank and mortgage companies, visited a
gun store where he had sought to purchase a rifle for self-defense.
Agents monitored—also asked the Internal Revenue Service to examine his
tax returns, and even infiltrated activist groups he associated with.
While Crow has been arrested a dozen times in his years of activism, he
has never faced a charge more serious than trespassing. He is among a
growing number of people and groups finding themselves on the receiving
end of government spying.
Well, Scott Crow joins us now from
Austin, Texas, to tell his story. And we’re also joined from Washington,
D.C., by Mike German, national security policy counsel for the American
Civil Liberties Union. He previously served as an FBI agent
specializing in domestic counterterrorism from 1988 to 2004.
Mike
German, we want to start with you on the most recent news of the new
leeway granted to FBI agents, of which you were one years ago, to
monitor people, not under any criminal charges or even suspicion.
Explain what you understand is happening right now.
MIKE GERMAN:
Right. You might remember that in 2008 Attorney General Michael Mukasey
altered the attorney general guidelines that govern the FBI’s
investigative authorities, and he created a new category of
investigations called "assessments." And these required no factual
predicate—in other words, no evidence that anybody had done anything
wrong, much less the person who is under investigation. And there are a
number of intrusive investigative techniques that were allowed to be
used, including physical surveillance, including recruiting and tasking
informants, including FBI agents acting in ruse trying to gather
information from the subjects of the investigation, conducting
interviews, even using grand jury subpoenas to get telephone records.
What
the new changes to the FBI’s internal policy is, to allow FBI agents,
even without an assessment being open, to search commercial
databases—these are subscription services of data aggregators that
collect, you know, a broad swath of information and really have a lot of
detailed private information about people—and also state and local law
enforcement databases. Again, this is without any suspicion of
wrongdoing. Without even opening an investigation, agents can start
searching for all this private information.
Another increase in
their authority is with assessments that they use to determine whether
an informant is—whether they can recruit an informant. And one of the
things they’re allowed to do is they’re adding trash haul, which means
that when you put your garbage out for the garbageman to pick up, it’s
an FBI agent picking it up instead, and they go through all this
material. And when I asked why they would want to give agents that
authority—again, before you have any evidence of wrongdoing—and they
said, "Well, it’s often helpful to find something derogatory that could
be used to pressure the person into becoming an informant." So, you
know, this is a technique being used specifically to coerce somebody to
cooperate against their neighbors or co-workers.
AMY GOODMAN:
The FBI declined our interview request today but did send us a
statement about the new guidelines. Quoting FBI General Counsel Valerie
Caproni, saying, quote: "Each proposed change has been carefully looked
at and considered against the backdrop of the tools our employees need
to accomplish their mission, the possible risks associated with use of
those tools, and the controls that are in place. Overall, this is fine
tuning, not any major change. The FBI’s authority to use specific
investigative tools is determined through the U.S. Constitution, U.S.
statutes, executive orders and the Attorney General’s Guidelines for
Domestic FBI Operations. The Domestic Investigations Operations Guide
cannot and does not confer additional powers to agents beyond that
provided by those controlling authorities." Your thoughts on that, Mike
German?
MIKE GERMAN: Well, again, the 2008
attorney general guidelines so loosened the standards for FBI
investigations that they’re basically nonexistent. No factual predicate
is required. So the idea that agents would be able to start those
investigations without even going through an administrative hurdle of
opening an assessment, I think, is an expansion of power that is
completely unaccountable.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to
go to Scott Crow to hear a real-life story. Scott, talk about when you
first applied under the Freedom of Information Act to get information
about whether the FBI was monitoring you.
SCOTT CROW:
Well, there’s a local organization called the Austin People’s Legal
Collective. It all came out after Brandon Darby came out as an informant
in 2008. Austin People’s Legal Collective decided to put together a
FOIA request for about 30 activists, about 40 organizations and about 10
events going back to the year 2000 in Austin. We sent it to multiple
field offices around the country and then—to see what we’d get back, to
try to build a picture of what kind of surveillance had been going on,
if there’s other infiltration. And in that, most—about 50 percent of the
documents that came back came back with nothing. About 30 percent came
back—people came back with a mention, or a group came back with a
mention. And then there was two cases, a case with the woman who
organized the Showdown in Texas, which was an event in 2003—there was
about 400 pages of documents—and then mine was a case where they had
years of extensive documentation going on. And that was kind of the
impetus of it all. And through that, I was able to find out that, you
know, that I had—there had been five informants in my life. Brandon
Darby was just the last one, who had run through our communities. But
when we did this, we did it across nine states. And I found out I was
investigated in nine states for arsons and other criminal acts that I
was never charged with.
AMY GOODMAN: Now, Brandon
Darby, for those who aren’t familiar, who has become a very familiar
name in progressive circles, explain your relationship with him and who
he is.
SCOTT CROW: Brandon Darby was a person who
had been a friend of mine and been on the edge of the activist
community within Austin for a number of years. He and I had gone to New
Orleans together, and then I ended up co-founding an organization called
Common Ground Relief out of that, out of those actions. And he worked
at Common Ground for a couple of years and left, and then he ended up
setting up—participating in this case with two men at the Republican
National Convention, where he possibly entrapped them, but definitely
provoked them into doing actions that they would not normally have done,
which they ended up going to prison for. And then he came out as an
informant, and it turned out he had been investigating a number of us
for a number of years.
AMY GOODMAN: So, when
exactly did you get the documents from the FBI? And talk about the
extent that they showed of their surveillance of you.
SCOTT CROW:
Well, let me—let me backtrack for a second. I first found out that I
was listed as a domestic terrorist in 2006. The FBI, in the way that
they ended up dealing with a lot of law enforcement around the country
is they let the local DAs and the local law enforcement officers know in
different cities. So in 2006, they let the DA in Baton Rouge know, and
he let the lawyers for the Angola 3 know, and the Angola 3 lawyer told
me. And that was the first time I ever heard about it, that I was listed
as a domestic terrorist and an animal rights extremist.
And what
it did was it opened up this world of possibilities in this kafkaesque
world, where I’m not being formally charged with anything, but all of
these things are happening. I mean, I could see people sitting out in
front of my house for years—I mean, all different kinds of cars. And I’m
not a paranoid person. I live a very transparent, open glass house. But
I could see all these things happening.
There was a BOLO that was
issued, a "be on the lookout" report that was issued in 2008, in the
Austin Police Department that said I might injure police officers, burn
down police cars, or incite riots. And the way I knew about it is
because people from the city that I had worked with told me that they
saw this poster with my picture on it. Now, again, I couldn’t do
anything about this. Well, finally, in 2010, I get these documents that
list me as a domestic terrorist since 2001, and it starts—the picture
starts to become clearer on all of the things that the FBI has been
doing across states, across multiple states, to investigate me and to
sow dissent, basically, amongst local and regional law enforcement.
AMY GOODMAN: Some of the redacted FBI documents that show the surveillance of you, Scott, have been posted on the New York Times website.
One FBI report describes the meeting of an activist group that you were
a part of, saying, quote, "Most attendees dressed like hippies, had
[dreadlocks] (both men and women), and smelled of bad odor." Another
report has the extensive details on the contents of your trash.
SCOTT CROW:
I mean, those two incidences just scratch the surface. The infiltration
happened over and over again in different groups, in different events.
There would be law enforcement and informants and people gathering
information at all different levels—city, county, state and federal
authorities—and private security, too. It’s a revolving door between
that sharing information and all of these things. Going through the
trash was part of it.
But really, what was—to me, what I think we
should talk about is that—how much money they spent investigating me,
and not charging me with anything. You know, like, if I’m the tip of the
iceberg and there’s other people in other communities that they’re
doing this with, how much is the government spending to do something
like this? And what kind of chilling effect does it have on activist
communities and on us as citizens in this country?
AMY GOODMAN:
How extensive, in terms of throughout the United States, was the
monitoring of you, Scott? What have you figured out at this point?
SCOTT CROW:
Well, they investigated me in nine states, like I said, in 12 field
offices. There was five informants. There was one in Austin, two in
Houston, one in Dallas and one in Detroit. I could only identify three
of those people. The other ones I can’t even identify who they are,
people I might have come in contact with over and over again. But
they’re targeting—but what we found out through these FOIAs—
AMY GOODMAN: They went to—they went out—
SCOTT CROW:—and through other FOIAs that—
AMY GOODMAN: They went out to the IRS to investigate you, as well?
SCOTT CROW:
Absolutely. They sent a letter to the IRS to see if they could get me
for tax evasion. And luckily, my partner Ann and I had always had our
taxes done, because we had owned our own businesses for the longest
time, and they found—the IRS came back and said they couldn’t—there was
nothing they could do about it. And there seemed to be a consternation
at the FBI about that.
They also used closed-circuit television on
a house in Dallas that I lived in, and then in Austin, where they put
cameras across—on poles across the streets from my house. The levels
that they went to, I think, are unimaginable to most people, because
it’s what you hear about in movies or what people fear the most about
it. But pretty much anything that you can think of that they did, except
for kicking my door in, happened to me. I was threatened with grand
juries, the trash digging, which they did on two occasions on the trash
digging, being visited at my work and visited at my home. You know, Mike
German spoke to, earlier, how they try to put pressure on people to
give information. I was first visited by the FBI in 1999. That was the
first time I ever heard the words "domestic terrorism" and "animal
rights" used together. And also, not only did they try to implicate me
in some crimes in Dallas or say that I had—or suggest that I had some
responsibility for those crimes, then they tried to use that pressure to
get me to give information on other people.
AMY GOODMAN: Now, you were—
SCOTT CROW: And so, how many people is that happening to across the country?
AMY GOODMAN:
That is a very important question. Mike German, you’re with the ACLU.
There have been a number of raids. These are the obvious—you know, more
obvious manifestations of this, raids in Chicago and Minneapolis of
activists’ homes. Can you talk about how wide this surveillance is and
what you understand is happening in other parts of the country?
MIKE GERMAN:
Sure. I think, like Scott said, we only see the tip of the iceberg. But
in 2004, 2005 and 2006, the ACLU issued a number of Freedom of
Information Act requests for Joint Terrorism Task Force investigations
against a number of political—politically active groups who suspected
that they were spied on, the same way Scott did. And we uncovered
widespread surveillance of different, you know, peace and justice
groups, environmental groups, all kinds of different groups. And that,
in turn, started an inspector general investigation that was just
released in September of 2010 that showed that the FBI was opening these
investigations with what they called factually weak predicates,
sometimes even speculative predicates. So it wasn’t that they thought
that the groups were involved in any criminal activity now, but just
that it was a possibility in the future they might be. Well, of course,
that’s true for all of us. We all might be future criminals. And that
was the sole criteria that the FBI was using to open preliminary
inquiries.
Now, these are supposed to be predicated investigations
where there is some factual basis. And these investigations,
unfortunately, the IG only looked at the cases that the ACLU had already
uncovered. He didn’t look beyond those. But what he found was those
investigations remained open for years, with no evidence of wrongdoing,
that the victims of these investigations would be put on terrorist watch
lists. And, you know, you can imagine, for a political activist, you
know, kind of like Scott recounted, when the FBI is going around telling
local officials that this political activist is a terrorist, that
cripples their ability to be effective in their advocacy. And it creates
a huge chilling effect that affects not just the people under
investigation, but others active on those political issues, and even
further, people who want to be active but feel it’s not worth it to come
under that kind of surveillance. So it has a real serious effect on our
democracy. And that’s really, you know, one of the most dangerous parts
about this.
AMY GOODMAN: How has the FBI changed
from Bush to Obama? I mean, Robert Mueller has now been head of the FBI
for almost 10 years under Bush and Obama.
MIKE GERMAN:
You know, this meeting that we were brought to about the expansion of
the FBI’s authority last month was really the first opportunity. We were
hoping, because we criticized the 2008 guidelines that were put in
place in December of 2008—so, literally just a month before the Obama
administration took over—we had criticized those heavily, so we were
hoping that what we were going to hear was that our criticism had been
heard and that they were going to scale back some of the things they
were doing. One of the things that we’re still working on is an
authority the FBI has given itself in their internal guidelines that
allows them to collect racial and ethnic demographic data and to map
racial and ethnic communities and collect racial and ethnic behavioral
information, whatever that is. And we’re trying to use Freedom of
Information Act to get at that information, but it’s difficult.
AMY GOODMAN:
Scott Crow, what are your plans right now? And I want to ask Mike
German also, what kind of recourse does someone like Scott have, now
that you’ve learned the extent of the surveillance? Do you even know,
Scott, right now if you’re be monitored?
SCOTT CROW:
I assume that I am, because my documents ended in 2008. They said that
was all that there was. And just to clarify, they gave me 500 pages of
1,200 pages. So there’s still 700 pages more to get. We’re going to sue
to try to get the rest of them and try to get the redactions taken away,
so we can see what was going on. But my biggest thing is not to—to tell
people not to be afraid, because everything that people fear I’ve had
happen to me, and I’m still OK. And I don’t mean that in a cavalier way,
because it’s been definitely traumatizing at different points, but if
we don’t come out and be open about this, then they’ve already won, and
the surveillance and the "war on terror" wins against us.
AMY GOODMAN: And Mike German, the kind of recourse people have? How do they even find out if they are the subject of surveillance?
MIKE GERMAN:
It’s very difficult. I mean, one of the things that we’re just finding
out in a California case is that the FBI and the Department of Justice
have been interpreting a portion of the Freedom of Information Act to
allow them to falsely say they do not have responsive documents when
they do. So it makes unclear whether the government is even being
upfront about whether they have documents that they’re not giving you.
So it’s very difficult, but we’re working with the Freedom of
Information Act the best we can. We’re working through the courts, and
we’re working on Capitol Hill, trying to get our elected representatives
to realize how important this is to the American public and to our
democracy. If people are afraid to engage in political activism, that’s
ultimately going to hurt us more than, you know, the waste of resources
and other aspects of this that are also untenable.
AMY GOODMAN:
Well, I want to thank you both very much for being with us, Mike
German, national security policy counsel for the American Civil
Liberties Union, formerly an FBI agent specializing in domestic
counterterrorism, and thank you to Scott Crow, Austin-based activist
targeted by FBI surveillance. His book Black Flags and Windmills is set to be published in August.